Spotlight Magazines Spotlight Magazine Mansfield South October 2015 | Page 24
Spotlight Magazine
Terrific Tulips
If I could grow only one type of flower
then it would have to be the tulip.
Harbingers of warmer days, the choice
available is mind-blowing. There are
frilly parrot tulips bearing fringed petals,
sturdy fat-flowered types and graceful
plants with lily-like blooms.
Water everything in but shelter the pot
from heavy rain so it doesn’t become
waterlogged and never water in frosty
weather. I use water-retaining granules
mixed in with the compost. These help
to maintain soil moisture throughout the
dormant season.
They are also tremendously
accommodating. You can plant them
much later than daffodils and narcissi
because they don’t need to start
producing roots so early. In fact you can
plant them from now until Christmas!
Feed the daisies or anemones throughout
their flowering season in the Autumn and
the Spring and you should be rewarded
with a beautiful display sometime in April
or May.
My mother uses them as annuals and rips
them up after flowering but I can’t bear to
do that so I plant them deeply and leave
them in the garden where they return
happily year on year.
If you want to use them as disposable
bedding you only need to plant them
about 10cm / 4 inches deep. If, like me,
you treat them as old friends then plant
them 23cm / 9 inches deep and they
won’t disappoint you.
I love to plant containers of tulips by my
front door. I have a red door so choose
something like Tulipa ‘Apeldoorn’ in
yellow and red varieties underplanted
with red daisies.
If you have a blue or green door you
might like to try Tulipa ‘Angelique’ (pale
pink) underplanted with pink anemones.
Or how about Tulipa ‘Bleu Aimable’ a
brilliant purple/blue variety?
By Rachel Leverton
Pot Luck
Tulips are wonderful in containers. As a
guide, a 25-30cm / 10-12 inch diameter
pot will accommodate a dozen bulbs. For
a larger 47.5cm / 19inch
pot use 16 –18 bulbs.
Cover the base with at
least 5cm / 2inches of
drainage material and
12cm / 5 inches of
soil-less multi-purpose
compost. Lay the bulbs in
an inner and outer circle
making sure that no bulb
touches either another, or
the outside of the pot.
Fill the pot with compost
to within 2.5cm / 1 inch
of the rim. I finish pots off
with strips of daisies or
anemones planted around
the edge in colours which
complement the tulips.
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